Comparison of various Microbial Inocula for the Efficient Anaerobic Digestion of Laminaria hyperborea

Abstract: 

Background: The hydrolysis of seaweed polysaccharides is the rate limiting step in anaerobic digestion (AD) of seaweeds. Seven different microbial inocula and a mixture of these (inoculum 8) were therefore compared intriplicate, each grown over four weeks in static culture for the ability to degrade Laminaria hyperborea seaweed and produce methane through AD.

Results: All the inocula could degrade L. hyperborea and produce methane to some extent. However, an inoculum of slurry from a human sewage anaerobic digester, one of rumen contents from seaweed-eating North Ronald say sheep and inoculum 8 used most seaweed volatile solids (VS) (means ranged between 59 and 68% used), suggesting that these each had efficient seaweed polysaccharide digesting bacteria. The human sewage inoculum, an inoculum of anaerobic marine mud mixed with rotting seaweed and inoculum 8 all developed to give higher volumes of methane (means between 41 and 62.5 ml g-1of seaweed VS by week four), compared to other inocula (means between 3.5 and 27.5 ml g-1VS). Inoculum 8 also gave the highest acetate production (6.5 mmol g-1VS) ina single-stage fermenter AD system and produced most methane (8.4 mL mmol acetate-1) in phase II of a two-stage AD system.

Conclusions: Overall inoculum 8 was found to be the most efficient inoculum for AD of seaweed. The study therefore showed that selection and inclusion of efficient polysaccharide hydrolysing bacteria and methanogenic archaea in an inoculum offer increased methane productivity in AD ofL. hyperborea. This inoculum will now beingtested in larger scale (10L) continuously stirred reactors optimised for feed rate and retention time to determinemaximum methane production under single-stage and two-stage AD systems

Author(s): 
Joao C Varela
Alastair D Sutherland
Keywords: 
Seaweed
Microbial inoculum
Anaerobic digestion
Laminaria hyperborea
Methane
Article Source: 
Sutherland and Varela BMC Biotechnology 2014, 14 :7
Category: 
Aquaculture methods
Ecological Services
Seaweed composition